Lake (nocturne)12mins, silent, B & WLake (nocturne) is a study of the interplay of artificial light with the changing patterns and movements in nature, exploring the illuminations and obfuscations that occur in landscape after dark. The shadowy forms of landscaped lake and parkland also resonate with past narratives of the pleasure garden, recalling the original meaning of nocturne as a term for music composed to be performed at night-time, as accompaniment to the illuminated tableaux, spectacles and fétes of grand gardens, evoking a lost domain.

Lucy Reynolds is a writer, artist and independent film programmer and Content Manager for Luxonline, whose doctorate research explores British expanded cinema. She has curated numerous screenings of artists film and video and her recent film programme, Describing Form, exploring the relationship between film and sculpture, has toured museums and galleries across Britain, from Tate Britain to Spacex, Exeter and the Henry Moore Institute. Recent publications include 'Margaret Tait: The Marks of Time' in Subjects and Sequences: A Margaret Tait Reader, 'Found Footage Film: The World in Fragments' in Ghostings: The Role of the Archive in Contemporary Artists Film and Video and 'Filmaktion: New Directions in Film Art' for Centre of the Creative Universe: Liverpool and the Avant-Garde, Tate Liverpool. She teaches the history and theory of film, specialising in artists moving image, at the University of Westminster and Birkbeck College.

Education2003 - University of East London, PHD in Fine Art/Film History1999-2001 University of East London, MA in Film History and Criticism1991-1992 Glasgow School of Art, Postgraduate in Fine Art Photography1987-1991 Reading University, BA (2/1) in Fine Art1984-1985 Salisbury College of Art, Foundation Course